- and because of rounding errors it led to slightly resize again and again
the ink container;
- when zooming the size is changing but not the ratio, so in this case we
don't need to change the dimension of the container.
`HTMLSectionElement` is not part of the DOM, so the generated typescript definitions contain a non-existing type.
HTML Section elements have to be handled as simple `HTMLElements`.
fixing punctuation and lint problems
[jsdoc] failing typescript builds - wrong type
Rather than including all of this external code in the PDF.js repository, we should be using the npm package instead.
Unfortunately this is slightly more complicated than you'd hope, since the `fit-curve` package (which is older) isn't directly compatible with modern JavaScript modules.
In particular, the following cases needed to be considered:
- For the development viewer (i.e. `gulp server`) and the unit-tests, we thus need to build a fitCurve-bundle that can be directly `import`ed.
- For the actual PDF.js build-targets, we can slightly reduce the sizes by depending on the "raw" `fit-curve` source-code.
- For the Node.js unit-tests, the `fit-curve` package can be used as-is.
- this way the context menu in Firefox can take into account what we
have in the clipboard, if an editor is selected, ...
- when the user will click on a context menu item, an action will be
triggered, hence this patch adds what is required to handle it;
- some tests will be added in the Firefox' patch.
Rather than forcing the user to *manually* call `setDimensions`, which is also breaking any existing third-party code, it seems that we can simply let the `AnnotationLayer.{render, update}`-methods handle that internally.
As far as I can tell, based on testing manually in the viewer *and* running the browser-tests, everything still appears to work correctly with this patch.
After the changes in PR 15036, the trigger-element created in `FileAttachmentAnnotationElement.render` is now too small. This can be fixed by using the same approach as in PR 15065, and the patch can be tested using the `annotation-fileattachment.pdf` document in the test-suite.
- for example in Dusk theme (Windows 11), black appears to be white, so
the user will draw something in white. But if they want to print or
save the used color must be black.
- fix a bug with the color input which only accepts hex string colors;
- adjust outline color of the selected/hovered editors in HCM.
- As in the annotation layer, use percent instead of pixels as unit;
- handle the rotation of the editor layer in allowing editing when rotation
angle is not zero;
- the different editors are rotated counterclockwise in order to be usable
when the main page is itself rotated;
- add support for saving/printing rotated editors.
Given that printing is triggered *synchronously* in browsers, it's thus possible for scripting (in PDF documents) to modify the Annotation-data while printing is currently ongoing.
To work-around that we add a new printing-specific `AnnotationStorage`, where the serializable data is *frozen* upon initialization, which the viewer can thus create/utilize during printing.
Note how the "page"-div, "canvasWrapper"-div, and `textLayer`-div all have *integer* dimensions (rounded down) rather than using the "raw" viewport-dimensions.
Hence it seems reasonable that the same should apply to the "annotationLayer"-div, now that it's explicit dimensions set.
There are obviously cases where using `concat` makes perfect sense, since that method doesn't change any of the existing Arrays; see https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Array/concat
However, in a few cases throughout the code-base that's not an issue and using `concat` only leads to unnecessary intermediate allocations. With modern JavaScript we can thus replace those with a combination of `push` and spread-syntax, which wasn't originally possible when the code was written.
- each annotation has its coordinates/dimensions expressed in percentage,
hence it's correctly positioned whatever the scale factor is;
- the font sizes are expressed in percentage too and the main font size
is scaled thanks a css var (--scale-factor);
- the rotation is now applied on the div annotationLayer;
- this patch improve the rendering of some strings where the glyph spacing
was not correct (it's a Firefox bug);
- it helps to simplify the code and it should slightly improve the update of
page (on zoom or rotation).
We want to avoid adding regular `id`s to Annotation-elements, since that means that they become "linkable" through the URL hash in a way that's not supported/intended. This could end up clashing with "named destinations", and that could easily lead to bugs; see issue 11499 and PR 11503 for some context.
Rather than using `id`s, we'll instead use a *custom* `data-element-id` attribute such that it's still possible to access the Annotation-elements directly.
Unfortunately these changes required updating most of the integration-tests, and to reduce the amount of repeated code a couple of helper functions were added.
- Since the border belongs to the section containing the HTML
counterpart of an annotation, this section must be hidden when
a JS action requires it;
- it wasn't possible to hide a button in using JS.
- Right now, we must select the tool, then click to select a page and
click to start drawing and it's a bit painful;
- so just create a new ink editor when we're hovering a page without one.
Apparently the ESLint rule added in PR 15031 wasn't able to catch all cases that can be converted, which is probably not all that surprising given how some of these call-sites look.
- Use `Element.prepend()` to insert nodes before all other ones in the element, rather than using `firstChild` with `insertBefore`-calls; see https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Element/prepend
- Fix one *incorrect* `insertBefore` call, in the AnnotationLayer-code.
Initially the patch simply changed that to an `Element.before()`-call, however that broke one of the integration-tests. It turns out that the `index` may try to access a non-existent select-child, which triggers undefined behaviour; note the warning in https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Node/insertBefore#parameters
Fixes two recent "Code scanning alerts" on GitHub, which likely happened because these calls originally used `parseInt` instead (during initial development).
After the changes in PR 14998, these operators are now no-ops in the `src/display/canvas.js` code and should no longer be necessary.
Given that `beginAnnotations`/`endAnnotations` are not in the PDF specification, but are rather *custom* PDF.js operators, it seems reasonable to stop using them now that they've become no-ops.
While `TextLayerRenderTask` apparently makes sense in TypeScript environments, given that it's being returned by the `renderTextLayer`-function in the API, we really don't want to extend the *public* API by simply exporting the class directly in `src/pdf.js` since it should never be called/initialized manually.
Hence we follow the same pattern as in PR 14013, and add some very basic unit-tests to ensure that `renderTextLayer` always returns a `TextLayerRenderTask`-instance as expected.
In PR #14717, the type was changed from a HTMLElement to a DocumentFragment.
This broke TypeScript projects that use a HTMLElement container.
To remedy this, we extend the type of container to also include HTMLElement.
- Approximate the drawn curve by a set of Bezier curves in using
js code from https://github.com/soswow/fit-curves.
The code has been slightly modified in order to make the linter
happy.
This only applies to *corrupt* PDF documents, where Annotations are missing the required /Rect-entry. Rendering PopupAnnotations unconditionally shouldn't be a problem, since we're not using a `BaseSVGFactory`-instance in that case.
- each annotation must be rendered independently of the others. So
after having rendered each annotation, the canvas states are reset
in order to have something clean to render the next one.
While calling `JSON.stringify(...)` on a class-instance obviously "works" (as in it doesn't throw), since it's really just an Object, it doesn't really make much sense in the context of the `AnnotationStorage.hash`-getter.
Also, access the *inverse* Viewport-transform correctly in `FreeTextEditor.serialize` to prevent errors being thrown when that method is invoked.
Finally, slightly updates the `AnnotationStorage.serializable`-getter to improve consistency within the class.
*This fixes a regression from PR 14754.*
We didn't lookup the image-data correctly, with the result that we tried to render some ImageMasks using a string rather than the intended TypedArray. To make matters worse, this code-path was apparently not *properly* covered by existing test-cases.
- Ensure that the modified-warning won't be displayed, when navigating away from the viewer, if the user has added custom Annotations and then *removed all* of them.
- Ensure that the *initial* editor-buttons state, i.e. the `toggled`-class, is correctly displayed in the toolbar when then viewer loads.
- Tweak the CSS-classes for the editor-buttons, such that they use the correct focus/hover-rules (similar to the sidebar-buttons).
- Remove a no longer accurate comment from the `BaseViewer.annotationEditorMode`-setter.
- Address a couple of *smaller* outstanding review comments, including some re-formatting changes, from PR 14976.
This patch contains a small optimization specifically for the case when `getDocument` is called with TypedArray-data. In that case we'll still hold onto that data, which could obviously be large, even after the "GetDocRequest"-message has been sent to the worker-thread.
In practice this will most likely not affect memory usage in any noticeable way, since the application calling `getDocument` will probably also be keeping a reference to the TypedArray-data. However, it seems like a good idea to ensure that the PDF.js API *itself* won't unnecessarily keep this data alive.
- it's a regression from PR #14247:
- before the PR, the button was rendered on the canvas whatever its status was;
- after the PR, the button image has been moved in an other canvas so when the button is not renderable
(because it has no actions) then the image is not added the HTML element.
- the buttons in the pdf in bug 1737260 or in the pdf in #14308 were not visible
- make the button always renderable but don't add the link element if it's useless.
- right now we're using the font size from the pdf itself but we use an other font
in the annotation layer. So this size doesn't really make sense and leads to bad
rendering (see pdf in #14928);
- use a sans-serif font for the fields containing text (fix issue #14736);
- remove useless padding in text-based fields (fix issue #14301);
- text fields allow/disallow scrolling bars (see bit 24 in Ff entry), so use this
value to hide/show scrollbars in annotation layer.
In the `src/display/canvas.js` code the `d1` operator will be used to set the clipping region, and it obviously cannot be empty since that prevents the Type3-glyph from rendering.
Also, the patch removes an outdated comment; refer to PR 12718.
If the computed background/foreground colors are identical, the `canvas` would be rendered mostly blank with only images visible. Hence it seems reasonable to also ignore the `pageColors`-option in this case.
Also, the patch tries to *briefly* outline the various cases in which we ignore the `pageColors`-option in a comment.
*This patch can be tested, in the viewer, using the `annotation-fileattachment.pdf` document from the test-suite.*
Note how the `FileSpec`-implementation already uses `stringToPDFString` during the filename lookup, see cfac6fa511/src/core/file_spec.js (L70)
Hence there's no reason to repeat that again in the `FileAttachmentAnnotationElement`-constructor, and we can thus simplify the "fileattachmentannotation"-event handling a little bit.
- Use Canvas & CanvasText color when they don't have their default value
as background and foreground colors.
- The colors used to draw (stroke/fill) in a pdf are replaced by the bg/fg
ones according to their luminance.
The current `lastModified`-getter, which only contains a time-stamp, is a fairly crude way of detecting if the stored data has actually been changed. In particular, when the `getRawValue`-method is used, the `lastModified`-getter doesn't cope with data being modified from the "outside".
To fix these issues[1], and to prevent any future bugs in this code, this patch introduces a new `AnnotationStorage.hash`-getter which computes a hash of the currently stored data. To simplify things this re-uses the existing `MurmurHash3_64`-implementation, which required moving that file into the `src/shared/`-folder, since its performance should be good enough here.
---
[1] Given how the `AnnotationStorage.lastModified`-getter was used, this would have been limited to *printing* of forms.
- since resetForm function reset a field value a calculateNow is consequently triggered.
But the calculate callback can itself call resetForm, hence an infinite recursive loop.
So basically, prevent calculeNow to be triggered by itself.
- in Firefox, the letters entered in some fields were duplicated: "AaBb" instead of "AB".
It was mainly because beforeInput was triggering a Keystroke which was itself triggering
an input value update and then the input event was triggered.
So in order to avoid that, beforeInput calls preventDefault and then it's up to the JS to
handle the event.
- fields have a property valueAsString which returns the value as a string. In the
implementation it was wrongly used to store the formatted value of a field (2€ when the user
entered 2). So this patch implements correctly valueAsString.
- non-rendered fields can be updated in using JS but when they're, they must take some properties
in the annotationStorage. It was implemented for field values, but it wasn't for
display, colors, ...
- it fixes#14862 and #14705.
Given that the `isNodeJS`-constant will, after PR 14858, *always* be `false` in non-GENERIC builds we can simplify a couple of `getDocument`-parameter default values slightly.
The old format, with inline `PDFJSDev`-checks, wasn't exactly a wonder of readability; which was my fault.
This first of all simplifies the file, since we no longer need dummy-classes and can instead *directly* define the actual classes.
Furthermore, and more importantly, this means that we no longer need to bundle this code in e.g. MOZCENTRAL-builds which reduces the size of *built* `pdf.js` file slightly.
Given that the `compileType3Glyph` function *returns* a function, see `drawOutline`, we'll thus keep the surrounding scope alive. Hence it shouldn't hurt to *explicitly* mark the temporary `Uint8Array`s, used during parsing, as no longer needed. Given the current `MAX_SIZE_TO_COMPILE`-value these `Uint8Array`s may be approximately two mega-bytes large *for every* Type3-glyph.
This moves the `COMPILE_TYPE3_GLYPHS`/`MAX_SIZE_TO_COMPILE`-checks into the `compileType3Glyph` function itself, which allows for some simplification at the call-site.
These changes also mean that the `COMPILE_TYPE3_GLYPHS`-check is now done *once* per Type3-glyph, rather than everytime that the glyph is being rendered.
- it aims to fix https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1264608;
- it's only a partial fix for #3351;
- some tiled images have some spurious white lines between the tiles.
When the current transform is applyed the corners of an image can have
some non-integer coordinates leading to some extra transparency added
to handle that. So with this patch the current transform is applied on the
point and on the dimensions in order to have at the end only integer values.
- most of the time the current transform is a scaling one (modulo translation),
hence it's possible to avoid to apply the transform on each bbox and then apply
it a posteriori;
- compute the bbox when it's possible in the worker.
- it's the second part of the fix for https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=857031;
- some image masks can be used several times but at different positions;
- an image need to be pre-process before to be rendered:
* rescale it;
* use the fill color/pattern.
- the two operations above are time consuming so we can cache the generated canvas;
- the cache key is based on the current transform matrix (without the translation part)
and the current fill color when it isn't a pattern.
- the rendering of the pdf in the above bug is really faster than without this patch.
Because of a bug in previous `core-js` versions, which caused an Error to be thrown if its `structuredClone` polyfill was called with an *explicit* `null`/`undefined` transfer-parameter, the `LoopbackPort`-class contained a work-around.
In the latest `core-js` version this has been fixed, and we can thus simplify our code ever so slightly; please see https://github.com/zloirock/core-js/releases/tag/v3.22.0
This CSS variable is only used together with the `annotationCanvasMap`-functionality in the canvas-code, however its value can be *trivially* computed by using the older `--zoom-factor` CSS variable together with the `PixelsPerInch`-structure.
Rather than having *two different* CSS variables that are this closely linked, it seems better to simplify things by using just one CSS variable instead.
- it aims to partially fix performance issue reported: https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=857031;
- the idea is too avoid to use byte arrays but use ImageBitmap which are a way faster to draw:
* an ImageBitmap is Transferable which means that it can be built in the worker instead of in the main thread:
- this is achieved in using an OffscreenCanvas when it's available, there is a bug to enable them
for pdf.js: https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1763330;
- or in using createImageBitmap: in Firefox a task is sent to the main thread to build the bitmap so
it's slightly slower than using an OffscreenCanvas.
* it's transfered from the worker to the main thread by "reference";
* the byte buffers used to create the image data have a very short lifetime and ergo the memory used is globally
less than before.
- Use the localImageCache for the mask;
- Fix the pdf issue4436r.pdf: it was expected to have a binary stream for the image;
- Move the singlePixel trick from operator_list to image: this way we can use this trick even if it isn't in a set
as defined in operator_list.
Given that the textLayer-code has been using a `DocumentFragment` ever since PR 3356 (back in 2013), simply updating the type of the `container` property should be fine.
This patch also tries to, ever so slightly, improve the grammar of a couple of other properties in the typedef.
There's a couple of `getDocument` parameters that should be numbers, but which are currently not *fully* validated to prevent issues elsewhere in the code-base.
Also, improves validation of the `ownerDocument` parameter since we currently accept more-or-less anything here.
Given that we now only use Workers when `postMessage` transfers are supported, there's really no point in trying to send a "test" message *without* transfers present.
Hence, if `postMessage` transfers are not supported by the browser, we'll now fallback to "fake" Workers immediately instead. The comment about Opera is also removed, since it was originally added back in PR 983 and mentions Opera `11.60` [which was released in 2011](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Opera_web_browser#Version_11).
These changes make sense for two reasons:
- Given that the parameters are potentially passed to the worker-thread, depending on the `useWorkerFetch` parameter, we need to prevent errors if the user provides values that aren't clonable.
- By ensuring that the default values are indeed `null`, we'll trigger main-thread fetching (of CMaps and Standard fonts) as intended in the `PartialEvaluator` and thus potentially provide better Error messages.
This function is currently placed in the `src/shared/util.js` file, which means that the code is duplicated in both of the *built* `pdf.js` and `pdf.worker.js` files. Furthermore, it only has a single call-site which is also specific to the `GENERIC`-build of the PDF.js library.
Hence this helper function is instead moved into the `src/display/api.js` file, in such a way that it's conditionally defined but still can be unit-tested.
The call-sites are replaced by direct `typeof`-checks instead, which removes unnecessary function calls. Note that in the `src/`-folder we already had more `typeof`-cases than `isString`-calls.
- it aims to fix:
- https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1753075;
- https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1743245;
- https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1710019;
- issue #13211;
- issue #14521.
- previously we were trying to adjust lineWidth to have something correct after the current transform is applied but this approach was not correct because finally the pixel is rescaled with the same factors in both directions.
And sometimes those factors must be different (see bug 1753075).
- So the idea of this patch is to apply a scale matrix to the current transform just before setting lineWidth and stroking. This scale matrix is computed in order to ensure that after transform, a pixel will have its two thickness greater than 1.
Currently we'll happily attempt to send any argument passed to this method over to the worker-thread, without doing any sort of validation.
That could obviously be quite bad, since there's first of all no protection against sending unclonable data. Secondly, it's also possible to pass data that will cause the `Ref.get` call in the worker-thread to fail immediately.
In order to address all of these issues, we'll now properly validate the argument passed to `PDFDocumentProxy.getPageIndex` and when necessary reject already on the main-thread instead.
The call-sites are replaced by direct `typeof`-checks instead, which removes unnecessary function calls. Note that in the `src/`-folder we already had more `typeof`-cases than `isNum`-calls.
These changes were *mostly* done using regular expression search-and-replace, with two exceptions:
- In `Font._charToGlyph` we no longer unconditionally update the `width`, since that seems completely unnecessary.
- In `PDFDocument.documentInfo`, when parsing custom entries, we now do the `typeof`-check once.
Given that we expose `PDFObjects`-instances, via the `commonObjs` and `objs` properties, on the `PDFPageProxy`-instances this ought to help provide slightly better TypeScript definitions.
The manually tracked `resolved`-property is no longer necessary, since the same information is now directly available on all `PromiseCapability`-instances.
Furthermore, since the `PDFObjects.resolve` method is not documented as accepting e.g. only Object-data, we probably shouldn't resolve the `PromiseCapability` with the `data` and instead only store it on the `PDFObjects`-instance.[1]
---
[1] While Objects are passed by reference in JavaScript, other primitives such as e.g. strings are passed by value and the current implementation *could* thus lead to increased memory usage. Given how we're using `PDFObjects` in the PDF.js code-base none of this should be an issue, but it still cannot hurt to change this.
This ensures that the underlying data cannot be accessed directly, from the outside, since that's definately not intended here.
Note that we expose `PDFObjects`-instances, via the `commonObjs` and `objs` properties, on the `PDFPageProxy`-instances hence these changes really cannot hurt.
*Please note:* I'm completely fine with this patch being rejected, and the issue instead closed as WONTFIX, since this is unfortunately a case where the TypeScript definitions dictate how we can/cannot write JavaScript code.
Apparently the TypeScript definitions generation converts the existing `PixelsPerInch` code into a `namespace` and simply ignores the getter; please see a7fc0d33a1/types/src/display/display_utils.d.ts (L223-L226)
Initially I tried tagging `PixelsPerInch` as en `@enum`, see https://jsdoc.app/tags-enum.html, however that unfortunately didn't help.
Hence the only good/simple solution, as far as I'm concerned, is to convert `PixelsPerInch` into a class with `static` properties. This patch results in the following diff, for the `gulp types` build target:
```diff
@@ -195,9 +195,10 @@
*/
static toDateObject(input: string): Date | null;
}
-export namespace PixelsPerInch {
- const CSS: number;
- const PDF: number;
+export class PixelsPerInch {
+ static CSS: number;
+ static PDF: number;
+ static PDF_TO_CSS_UNITS: number;
}
declare const RenderingCancelledException_base: any;
export class RenderingCancelledException extends RenderingCancelledException_base {
```
Soft masks can be enabled/disabled at anytime and at different
points in the save/restore stack. This can lead to
the amount of save/restores becoming unbalanced across the
two canvases. Instead of save/restoring on the temporary canvas
change it so we only track state on the main (suspended canvas).
I was also getting an out balance stack from patterns, so I've also
fixed that and added a warning that will at least show up on chrome.
It would be nice to add this so Firefox at some point too.
Fixes#11328, #14297 and bug 1755507
With recent changes, specifically PR 14515 *and* the previous patch, the `createObjectURL` helper function is now only used with the SVG back-end.
All other call-sites, throughout the code-base, are now using `URL.createObjectURL(...)` directly and it no longer seems necessary to keep exposing the helper function in the API.
Finally, the `createObjectURL` helper function is moved into the `src/display/svg.js` file to avoid unnecessarily duplicating this code on both the main- and worker-threads.
This is essentially a *continuation* of PR 7926, where we added support for rejecting the current `PDFDocumentLoadingTask`-promise by throwing inside of the `onPassword`-callback.
Hence the naive way to address [bug 1754421](https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1754421) would be to simply throw in the `onPassword`-callback used in the default viewer. However it unfortunately turns out to not work, since the password input/validation is asynchronous, and we thus need another approach.
The simplest solution that I can come up with here, is thus to *extend* the `onPassword`-callback to also reject the current `PDFDocumentLoadingTask`-instance if an `Error` is explicitly passed as the input to the callback function. (This doesn't feel great, but I cannot see a better solution that isn't really complicated.)
With these changes, we'll now *always* replace all whitespaces with standard spaces (0x20). This behaviour is already, since many years, the default in both the viewer and the browser-tests.
This allows us to remove the manually implemented `structuredClone` polyfill, thus reducing the maintenance burden for the `LoopbackPort` class; refer to https://github.com/zloirock/core-js#structuredclone
*Please note:* While `structuredClone` support landed already in Firefox 94, Google Chrome only added it in version 98 (currently in Beta). However, given that the `LoopbackPort` will only be used together with *fake workers* in browsers this shouldn't be too much of a problem.[1]
For Node.js environments, where *fake workers* are unfortunately necessary, using a `legacy/`-build is already required which thus guarantees that the `structuredClone` polyfill is available.
Also, the patch updates core-js to the latest version since that one includes `structuredClone` improvements; please see https://github.com/zloirock/core-js/releases/tag/v3.20.3
---
[1] Given that we only support browsers with proper worker support, if *fake workers* are being used that essentially indicates a configuration problem/error.
This commit fixes Bug 1743245 (Grided PDF file lines rendered too thick) which was created by a fix for #12868 .
The lineWidth was set to round(1 * this._combinedScaleFactor) when the pixel is drawn as a parallelorgam with a height <1. This fix changes this to floor(1*this._combinedScaleFactor) .
This change shows a visual result comparable to Chrome and Acrobat.
Regarding the last PR 3 statements in canvas.js are affected and will change with this commit (stroke and paintChar).
renaming the reference files to naming comvention
- it aims to fix issue #14307;
- this event has been added recently in Firefox and we can now use it;
- fix few bugs in aform.js or in annotation_layer.js;
- add some integration tests to test keystroke events (see `AFSpecial_Keystroke`);
- make dispatchEvent in the quickjs sandbox async.
This prevents the `BaseSVGFactory.create`-method from throwing, and thus preventing any remaining Annotations (on the page) from rendering in corrupt documents.
As part of the changes/improvement in PR 14092, we're no longer using the `addLinkAttributes` directly in e.g. the AnnotationLayer-code.
Given that the helper function is now *only* used in the viewer, hence it no longer seems necessary to expose it through the official API.
*Please note:* It seems somewhat unlikely that third-party users were relying *directly* on the helper function, which is why it's not being exported as part of the viewer components. (If necessary, we can always change this later on.)
This patch circumvents the issues seen when trying to update TypeScript to version `4.5`, by "simply" fixing the broken/missing JSDocs and `typedef`s such that `gulp typestest` now passes.
As always, given that I don't really know anything about TypeScript, I cannot tell if this is a "correct" and/or proper way of doing things; we'll need TypeScript users to help out with testing!
*Please note:* I'm sorry about the size of this patch, but given how intertwined all of this unfortunately is it just didn't seem easy to split this into smaller parts.
However, one good thing about this TypeScript update is that it helped uncover a number of pre-existing bugs in our JSDocs comments.
In PR 14114 this was only added to the default viewer, which means that in the viewer components the user would need to *manually* implement /Lang handling. This was (obviously) a bad choice, since the viewer components already support e.g. structTrees by default; sorry about overlooking this!
To avoid having to make *two* `getMetadata` API-calls[1] very early during initialization, in the default viewer, the API will now cache its result. This will also come in handy elsewhere in the default viewer, e.g. by reducing parsing when opening the "document properties" dialog.
---
[1] This not only includes a round-trip to the worker-thread, but also having to re-parse the /Metadata-entry when it exists.
Given that not all pages necessarily are being accessed, or that the pages may be accessed out of order, using a `Map` seems like a more appropriate data-structure here.
Finally, also changes the `pagePromises` to a *private* property since it's not supposed to be accessed from the "outside".
Given that not all pages necessarily are being accessed, or that the pages may be accessed out of order, using a `Map` seems like a more appropriate data-structure here.
For one thing, this simplifies iteration since we no longer have to worry about/check if `pageCache`-entries are undefined (which will happen for *sparse* `Array`s).
Of particular note is that we're no longer attempting to "null" the `pageCache`-entry from within the `PDFPageProxy._destroy`-method. Given that *synchronous* JavaScript will always run to completion[1] and that we're looping through all pages in `WorkerTransport.destroy` and immediately clear the cache afterwards, that code did/does not really make a lot of sense (as far as I can tell).
Finally, also changes the `pageCache` to a *private* property since it's not supposed to be accessed from the "outside".
---
[1] Unless there are errors, of course.
*Please note:* These changes will primarily benefit longer documents, somewhat at the expense of e.g. one-page documents.
The existing `PDFDocumentProxy.getStats` function, which in the default viewer is called for each rendered page, requires a round-trip to the worker-thread in order to obtain the current document stats. In the default viewer, we currently make one such API-call for *every rendered* page.
This patch proposes replacing that method with a *synchronous* `PDFDocumentProxy.stats` getter instead, combined with re-factoring the worker-thread code by adding a `DocStats`-class to track Stream/Font-types and *only send* them to the main-thread *the first time* that a type is encountered.
Note that in practice most PDF documents only use a fairly limited number of Stream/Font-types, which means that in longer documents most of the `PDFDocumentProxy.getStats`-calls will return the same data.[1]
This re-factoring will obviously benefit longer document the most[2], and could actually be seen as a regression for one-page documents, since in practice there'll usually be a couple of "DocStats" messages sent during the parsing of the first page. However, if the user zooms/rotates the document (which causes re-rendering), note that even a one-page document would start to benefit from these changes.
Another benefit of having the data available/cached in the API is that unless the document stats change during parsing, repeated `PDFDocumentProxy.stats`-calls will return *the same identical* object.
This is something that we can easily take advantage of in the default viewer, by now *only* reporting "documentStats" telemetry[3] when the data actually have changed rather than once per rendered page (again beneficial in longer documents).
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[1] Furthermore, the maximium number of `StreamType`/`FontType` are `10` respectively `12`, which means that regardless of the complexity and page count in a PDF document there'll never be more than twenty-two "DocStats" messages sent; see 41ac3f0c07/src/shared/util.js (L206-L232)
[2] One example is the `pdf.pdf` document in the test-suite, where rendering all of its 1310 pages only result in a total of seven "DocStats" messages being sent from the worker-thread.
[3] Reporting telemetry, in Firefox, includes using `JSON.stringify` on the data and then sending an event to the `PdfStreamConverter.jsm`-code.
In that code the event is handled and `JSON.parse` is used to retrieve the data, and in the "documentStats"-case we'll then iterate through the data to avoid double-reporting telemetry; see https://searchfox.org/mozilla-central/rev/8f4c180b87e52f3345ef8a3432d6e54bd1eb18dc/toolkit/components/pdfjs/content/PdfStreamConverter.jsm#515-549
Given that all modern browsers now support `postMessage` transfers, and have for years, it no longer seems necessary for the PDF.js library to support using Workers unless the `postMessage` transfers functionality is available.
This patch is a follow-up to PR 11123, which made it impossible to *manually* disable `postMessage` transfers for performance reasons (since it increases memory usage), which hasn't caused any bug reports as far as I know.[1]
Hence we'll now only support *proper* Worker implementations, with fully working `postMessage` transfers, and fallback to using "fake" Workers otherwise.
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[1] At the time of that PR we still "supported" IE, which is why this code was left intact.
- First step to fix https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1737260;
- several interactive pdfs use the possibility to hide/show buttons to show different icons;
- render pushbuttons on their own canvas and then insert it the annotation_layer;
- update test/driver.js in order to convert canvases for pushbuttons into images.
Previously, when we created a shading pattern canvas we created it
as the same size as the page. This was good for caching if the same
pattern was used over and over again, but when lots of different
shadings are created that caused us to create many full page
canvases.
Instead of creating the full page canvses, create the canvas
as the same size as the current path bounding box. This reduces memory
consumption by a lot since most paths are pretty small. Also, in real world
PDFs it's rare for a shading (non shading fill) to be reused over and over again.
Bug 1721949 is an example where the same pattern is reused and it will be slightly
slower than before.
We were incorrectly using the transform in the pattern before it had been
adjusted causing the pattern to be misplaced relative to the page.
Fixes: ShowText-ShadingPattern.pdf (already in corpus)
Fixes: #8111Fixes: #9243
Starting a new path will wipe out any of the current subpaths in the
current graphics state, so we should reset the min/maxes.
This makes a number of the bounding boxes smaller and reduces the number
of composed pixels. For the smask tests in the corpus, the number of
composed pixesl goes from 19,872,109 to 19,676,905. The difference is much
larger on other PDFs though.
This allows us to compose much smaller regions of soft
mask making them much faster. This should also allow
for further optimizations in the pattern code.
For example locally I see issue #6573 go from 55s
to 5s with this change.
Fixes#6573
The old method of handling soft masks had a number of issues where the temporary
drawing canvas and the suspended main canvas could get out of sync
(e.g. mismatched save/restores or clip state) or we could end up compositing at
the wrong time. A good example of things getting out sync is the reduced test
case in #9017.
To fix this I've changed two big things:
1) Duplicate all the needed graphics state from the temporary canvas to the
suspended main canvas. This ensure the canvases stay in sync so that when we
switch back to the main canvas the graphics state stack is the same
(e.g. transforms, clip paths).
2) Immediately composite after each drawing operation. This ensures that if
there's an active clip region that we'll still be able to composite the correct
portions of the canvas. Note: This solution could be avoided by using
getImageData and putImageData since those ignore clipping region, but this is
very very slow. Note2: I also think the old way of only compositing at the end
of the soft mask is incorrect and can lead to wrong colors if drawing over the
same region, but in practice this doesn't seem to matter much.
Fixes: #5781Fixes: #5853Fixes: #7267Fixes: #7891Fixes: #8403Fixes: #8624Fixes: #12798Fixes: #13891Fixes: #9017 (reduced test case)
Fixes: https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1703683
With ResetForm-action support added in PR 14083, there's a regression in the `issue12716` test-case. More specifically the border around the "Clear Form"-link is now rendered *twice*, once in the canvas via the appearance-stream and once in the annotationLayer via the border-data.
This looks slightly weird, and was most likely not intended, which is why this patch suggests that we ignore the border in the annotationLayer when an appearance-stream exists.
- PR #13257 fixed a lot of issues but not all and this patch aims to fix almost all remaining issues.
- the idea in this new patch is to compare position of new glyph with the last position where a glyph has been drawn;
- no space are "drawn": it just moves the cursor but they aren't added in the chunk;
- so this way a space followed by a cursor move can be treated as only one space: it helps to merge all spaces into one.
- to make difference between real spaces and tracking ones, we used a factor of the space width (from the font)
- it was a pretty good idea in general but it fails with some fonts where space was too big:
- in Poppler, they're using a factor of the font size: this is an excellent idea (<= 0.1 * fontSize implies tracking space).
This patch (slightly) simplifies a couple of `onProgress` and `onUnsupportedFeature` call-sites.
Finally, while unrelated, also removes some unnecessary `return undefined;` statements (PR 11601 follow-up).
For Circle, Square, and Polygon Annotations it's currently only possible to toggle the associated PopupAnnotation by clicking on its border. Depending on the border width, and also the current zoom-level in the viewer, that can make interacting with certain Annotations *practically* impossible (which is the case in issue 14107).
Hence, in order to improve this, change the "fill"-property of the SVG element in the annotationLayer to make the *entire* element part of the click/mouse-over target.
*Please note:* Given that this is a viewer-related issue, there's no simple way to test this as far as I can tell.
With a recent addition to the HTML specification, the internal structured clone algorithm used in browsers is (or will be, once it's implemented) *directly* accessible to JavaScript; please see https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/WindowOrWorkerGlobalScope/structuredClone
Hence we'll *eventually* not need to maintain our own structured clone functionality in the `LoopbackPort`-class in the API, however for the time being we'll feature detect `structuredClone` and fallback to the existing PDF.js implementation.
Given that https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1722576 has landed in Firefox 94, we should no longer need the manually implemented `cloneValue`-functionality in MOZCENTRAL builds. Note also that in the Firefox built-in PDF Viewer it's not possible for users to *easily* disable workers, which should further reduce the risk of these changes.
This patch helps reduce some duplication, given that we now have a few essentially identical `addLinkAttributes` call-sites in the code-base.
To prevent runtime errors in the Annotation/XFA-layer code, we'll warn if a custom/incomplete `PDFLinkService` is being used (limited to GENERIC builds).
Note how both the annotationLayer and the document outline will apply various URL-related options when creating the link-elements.
For consistency the `xfaLayer`-rendering should obviously use the same options, to ensure that the existing options are indeed applied to all URLs regardless of where they originate.
Given that `NodeList`s can be iterated using `for..of` we can use that instead, since it's a little bit nicer and easier to read than the `Array.prototype.forEach` format.
- it aims to fix#12721.
- Thanks to PR #14023, we've now the fieldObjects in the annotation layer so we can easily map fields names on their id if needed.
- Reset values in the storage, in the JS sandbox and in the visible html elements.
- it aims to fix#14021;
- the N dict is empty here so just create a default one;
- it implies that the checked checkbox has no appearance so create a default one too in order to print it;
- in the pdf in the issue, a checked box is not printed because it has no default appearance so we need to guess its appearance from its state.
In order to implement this, we utilize the existing `bidi` function to infer the text-direction of /T and /Contents entries. While this may not be perfect in cases where one PopupAnnotation mixes LTR and RTL languages, it should work well enough in most cases.
To avoid having to add *two new* properties in lots of annotations, supplementing the existing `title`/`contents`-properties, this patch instead re-factors the existing code such that the properties are replaced by Objects (containing `str` and `dir`).
*Please note:* In order avoid breaking existing third-party implementations, `GENERIC`-builds of the PDF.js library will still provide the old `title`/`contents`-properties on annotations returned by `PDFPageProxy.getAnnotations`.
This replaces direct `document.getElementsByName` lookups with a helper method which:
- Lets the AnnotationLayer use the data returned by the `PDFDocumentProxy.getFieldObjects` API-method, such that we can directly lookup only the necessary DOM elements.
- Fallback to using `document.getElementsByName` as before, such that e.g. the standalone viewer components still work.
Finally, to fix the problems reported in issue 14003, regardless of the code-path we now also enforce that the DOM elements found were actually created by the AnnotationLayer code.
With these changes we'll thus be able to update form elements on all visible pages just as before, but we'll additionally update the AnnotationStorage for not-yet-rendered elements thus fixing a pre-existing bug.